Dorgan v. Telegraph Co.

7 F. Cas. 918

This text of 7 F. Cas. 918 (Dorgan v. Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorgan v. Telegraph Co., 7 F. Cas. 918 (circtsdal 1874).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge

(charging jury). The following facts are not controverted: At about eleven o’clock a. m. of the 30th of January, 1872, the plaintiff sentfrom Mobile, Alabama, over the lines of the Western Union Telegraph Company to New York City, the following cipher dispatch: “To J. S. Abbott & Co., New York: Sell Samuel basis silver full style and staple fob dog demon. Reply to-day; have refusal.” Which, when translated, reads as follows: “Sell 500 bales, basis middling, full style and staple, free on board at 21% cents, at % penny freight. Re-lily to-day; have refusal.” This dispatch was transmitted to New York and there delivered without unreasonable delay to J. S. Abbott & Co. On the same day, some time-between twenty and forty minutes after five o’clock p. m., New York time, J. S. Abbott «fc Co. delivered to the receiving clerk at the main office of defendant, in New York, to be transmitted over the lines of defendant to the plaintiff in Mobile, the following cipher dispatch, the same being in response to the dispatch sent by the plaintiff to J. S. Abbott & Co:—“Sold Samuel, basis silver, fob dog demon, prompt shipment, draw with documents. Edward Dobell. Insure. Telegraph drafts.” The meaning of this dispatch was not communicated to the defendant or its agents, but the clerk who received it was told it was important, and requested to forward it immediately. A majority of persons who send messages by telegraph say to the receiving clerk that their messages are important and request that they be sent at once. This dispatch translated would read: “Sold 500 bales, basis middling, free on board at 21% cents, freight % penny; prompt shipment. Draw with documents on Edward Dobell. Insure against, fire. .Telegraph drafts.” The dispatch was received in Mobile- at ten o’clock p. m. of January 30, but was not delivered to the plaintiff in Mobile until half past ten o’clock a. m. of the next day. The time required to transmit a message of ordinary length from New York to Mobile, when the lines are in good order and there is no other message having precedence, is about four minutes. On January 31st the plaintiff bought five hundred bales of cotton in Mobile ■ to fill the contract of sale referred to in the dispatch to him, at the price of fifty-four thousand one hundred and ninety-nine dollars and twenty-eight cents, and the same cotton could have been [919]*919purchased in Mobile on January 30th for eight hundred and ninety-nine dollars, and forty-three cents less than that sum. New York time is fifty-five minutes faster than Mobile time, so that when it is five o’clock p. m. in Mobile it lacks but five minutes of six p. m. in New York. J. S. Abbott & Co., to whom the plaintiff’s message was addressed and who sent the reply, were the agents of the plaintiff in New York, and the plaintiff paid for both dispatches. He paid for the dispatch from J. S. Abbott & Co., three dollars and sixty-nine cents, which was the usual day rate for unrepeated and uninsured messages. The message sent by J. S. Abbott & Co. was written upon the blanks furnished by the defendant for day messages, and upon which it required day messages to be written. The business office of plaintiff in Mobile is but one or two blocks from the office of defendant, and his residence about a mile or a mile and a half. It is the custom of the defendant at half-past nine o’clock p. m. to dismiss its messenger boys for the day, and at ten o’clock p. m. to close its office. The plaintiff before January 30th, 1S72, had done much business with the defendant’s office in Mobile. The plaintiff alleges that the delay in not delivering the dispatch sent by J. S. Abbott & Co. to him until January 31st was the result of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant and its agents, and that he suffered damage to an amount equal to the difference in the value of five hundred bales of cotton in Mobile on the 30th and of the same quantity of cotton in Mobile on the 31st of January. To the declaration of the plaintiff setting up this claim, the defendant pleads a general denial of the case stated by the plaintiff, with leave to introduce evidence in proof of any matter that might be specially pleaded.

The defense as really made amounts to this:—(1) That generally the averments of the declaration are not true. (2) That there was no negligence or carelessness on the part of the defendant in transmitting or delivering the message. (3) That if the plaintiff ■suffered damage from the neglect of defendant, he contributed to the damage by his own neglect and carelessness. (4) That if the plaintiff suffered any damage by the delay in the transmission and delivery of the dispatch, it was a damage not within the reasonable contemplation of the parties when the contract for sending the message was made between them. (5) That the printed blanks, upon which the defendant required messages to be written, contained a clause exempting the defendant from liability from all except nominal damages for delay in the delivery of unrepeated messages, and that in any event the plaintiff can only recover nominal damages.

Your first duty, under the pleadings in this case, will be to inquire whether the plaintiff has made out his case by proof, substantially as he has stated in his declaration. So far as this part of the case is concerned, the only point in dispute between the parties is as to the question of negligence. Prompt and speedy communication between different localities is one of the most urgent wants of the present age. To meet this demand telegraph companies are chartered, and they engage to subserve the public interests by transmitting intelligence promptly and speedily. Their engagement is to receive and to transmit by telegraph and to deliver, without unnecessary delay, the message according to the directions. Persons whose messages do not require the most rapid transmission and speedy delivery, take the cheaper and slower method of communication afforded by the mails. When a telegraph company therefore receives a message for transmission, the faij- inference is that the sender resorts to the telegraph because he cannot or does not choose to wait for the mail, and the telegraph company agrees by implication that his message shall be carefully transmitted by telegraph and delivered without unnecessary delay. 2 Redf. R. R. 287-304; Raw of Telegraphs, §§ 146, 187, 188. 352; Allen, Tel. Cas. 71, 114, 284, 335, 563, 570; Sweatland v. Telegraph Co., 27 Iowa, 433. You will therefore inquire whether there was negligence on the part of the defendant in either transmitting or delivering the message in question. It is admitted thatthe message was left at the office in New York, for transmission to Mobile, at about twenty minutes after five p. m., and that it was not delivered until half past ten the next morning; and that under ordinary circumstances it would require only about four minutes to transmit the message from the office of the defendant in New York to its office in Mobile; and that plaintiff paid day rates and not night rates for the message. These facts being conceded, I instruct you as a matter of law, that a prima facie case of negligence is made out against the defendant Moore v. Westervelt, 1 Bosw. 357: Allen. Tel. Cas. 284, 345, 570; Law of Telegraphs, § 370; Shear. & R. Neg. 610.

The admitted facts having established the negligence of the defendant, the burden of proof is putupondefendantto rebut the prima facie case thus made. Por although the facts unexplained show negligence, the defendant may, by evidence, so excuse and explain its conduct as to make it perfectly clear that there was, in fact, no negligence whatever. This the defendant has undertaken to do.

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Related

Wibert v. . the New-York and Erie Railroad Co.
12 N.Y. 245 (New York Court of Appeals, 1855)
True v. International Telegraph Co.
60 Me. 9 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1872)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Graham
1 Colo. 182 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1870)
Candee v. Western Union Telegraph Co.
34 Wis. 471 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1874)
Sweatland v. Ill. & Miss. Telegraph Co.
27 Iowa 433 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1869)
Moore v. Westervelt
1 Bosw. 357 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1857)

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorgan-v-telegraph-co-circtsdal-1874.